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Action Alert: Psychology Today Praises Woman Who Murdered Her Husband as ‘Great Revenge’

Fathers & Families is sending the protest letter below to Psychology Today via regular US mail and email. To add your signature to the letter and send it to Psychology Today, simply click here and fill out the fields. Letter from Fathers & Families to Psychology Today:

Kaja Perina Editor-in-Chief Psychology Today 115 E. 23rd St., 9th Floor New York, NY 10010 212-260-7210 Dear Ms. Perina & Psychology Today: In the shockingly irresponsible article “Sweet Revenge” (Psychology Today, January/February 2010), Regina Barreca, Ph.D. praises convicted Texas killer Clara
Harris for her “great moment of revenge.” The act for which Barreca praises Harris? In 2002, Harris repeatedly ran over her ex-husband David, as David’s daughter Lindsey sat in the front seat of the car begging Clara Harris not to kill her father. While Barreca praises Clara Harris, Lindsey, who loved her father and was only 16 years old at the time of the killing, publicly denounced Clara Harris for “the ultimate act of selfishness, caring only about obtaining revenge and thinking not one bit about how her horrible act was going to affect me or my brothers, Brian and Bradley. Anyone who shared my ride in the car that evening, seeing my dad”s face as he was about to be hit, and experiencing the horrible feel of the car bumping over his body would understand that this murderess deserves no sympathy.’ Lindsey says that Clara mistreated and neglected David, and that her father often confided in her how lonely he felt. Coupled with Clara”s temper and evident capacity for violence, David had ample reason to want to get out of the relationship. Instead of letting him go, Clara killed him. Does Psychology Today feel this is praiseworthy? Besides condoning violence, Barreca’s article also reeks of gender bias. The majority of divorces are initiated by women, not by men, and research shows that women’s decision to divorce often catches their husbands by surprise. These men don’t just lose their wives, they often lose their children, too, and their rationale for feeling betrayed is often far more legitimate than Clara Harris’. Does Barreca also feel it would be “great revenge” for these men to murder their wives? No type of marital or post-marital violence should ever be condoned, much less praised, and Psychology Today should immediately and clearly distance itself from Barreca’s reprehensible statements. Sincerely, Glenn Sacks, MA Executive Director, Fathers & Families Ned Holstein, M.D., M.S. Founder, Chairman of the Board, Fathers & Families

To learn more about the Clara Harris case, see my co-authored Houston Chronicle column Suppose Roles Had Been Reversed in Clara Harris Case (1/27/07).

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